Adam Hawkins (born July 1976) is an American recording and mix engineer.[1]
Life and career
editHawkins was born in New Jersey, and later moved with his family to North Carolina. After graduating from high school he moved back to New Jersey to become a studio assistant in Manhattan.[2][3]
The album Hello Hurricane, which Hawkins worked on, received the 2010 Grammy award for best rock or rap gospel album.[4]
Discography
edit- The Massacre by 50 Cent (2005)[5]
- Audio Daydream by Blake Lewis (2007)
- Used and Abused by Danger Radio (2008)
- Pocketful of Sunshine by Natasha Bedingfield (2008)
- P!nk Box by Pink (2009)
- Kris Allen by Kris Allen (2009)
- Holy Smoke by Gin Wigmore (2009)
- Hello Hurricane by Switchfoot (2009)
- Far by Regina Spektor (2009)
- A Fine Mess by Kate Voegele (2009)
- Nightmare by Avenged Sevenfold (2010)
- Live It Up by Lee DeWyze (2010)
- Come and Get It! by Eli "Paperboy" Reed (2010)
- Vows by Kimbra (2011)
- Vice Verses by Switchfoot (2011)
- The Hunter by Mastodon (2011)
- What We Saw from the Cheap Seats by Regina Spektor (2012)
- Moving Up Living Down by Eric Hutchinson (2012)
- Into the Wild: Live at EastWest Studios by LP (2012)
- Blak and Blu by Gary Clark Jr. (2012)
- Talking Dreams by Echosmith (2013)
- Hail to the King by Avenged Sevenfold (2013)
- Fiction Family Reunion by Fiction Family (2013)
- Weightless by Matt Andersen (2014)
- Lowborn by Anberlin (2014)
- Fading West by Switchfoot (2014)
- Blurryface by Twenty One Pilots (2015)
- For Life by Phases (2016)
- "Heathens" by Twenty One Pilots (2016)
- "Satisfied" by Sia (2016)
- The Hamilton Mixtape by various artists (2016)
- Surf the Web by Daye Jack (2016)
- Natural Causes by Skylar Grey (2016)
- Jessica Rabbit by Sleigh Bells (2016)
- A Living Human Girl by The Regrettes (2016)
- Feel Your Feelings Fool! by The Regrettes (2017)
- What If Nothing by Walk the Moon (2017)
- "FAB" by JoJo (2017)
- Tales from the Backseat by The Academic (2017)
- Dreamcar by Dreamcar (2017)
- Simulation Theory by Muse, (2018)
- "Dig Down" by Muse (2018)
- Black Reign by Avenged Sevenfold (2018)
- "Brief Exchange" by Chino Moreno (2018)
- "Youngblood" by 5 Seconds of Summer (2018)
- Expectations by Hayley Kiyoko (2018)
- "Red Death" by Brann Dailor (2018)
- "Setting Sun" by Jerry Cantrell (2018)[6]
- Winnetka Bowling League by Winnetka Bowling League (2018)
- Trench by Twenty One Pilots (2018)
- Loser by Jagwar Twin (2018)
- "Youngblood" by 5 Seconds of Summer (2018)
- Apologize by Grandson (2019)
- Bullet Holes by Bush (2019)
- Eye of the Storm by One Ok Rock, (2019)
- A Modern Tragedy, Vol. 2 by Grandson (2019)
- How Do You Love? by The Regrettes (2019)
- Launch Fly Land by Dreamers (2019)
- Miracle Pill by Goo Goo Dolls (2019)
- Native Tongue by Switchfoot (2019)
- The St. Nemele Collab Sessions by Toby Mac (2019)
- The Underrated Youth by Yungblud (2019)
- Acting My Age by The Academic/ Cid Rim (2020)
- Breathe You Got This by The Score, (2020)
- Death of an Optimist by Grandson (2020)
- "Level of Concern" by Twenty One Pilots (2020)
- Medium Rarities by Mastodon (2020)
- Set It Off by The Score (2020)
- The Bastards by Palaye Royale (2020)
- Tickets to My Downfall by Machine Gun Kelly (2020)
- "Swimming in the Stars" by Britney Spears (2020)
- Scaled and Icy by Twenty One Pilots (2021)
- Glow On by Turnstile (2021)
- I Can't Get High by Royal & The Serpent (2021)
- Obviously by Lake Street Dive (2021)
- Surface Sounds by Kaleo (2021)
- Tell Me About Tomorrow by Jxdn (2021)
- On To Better Things Iann Dior (2022)
- The Jaws of Life by Pierce the Veil (2023)
- One More Time... by Blink-182 (2023)
- Clancy by Twenty One Pilots (2024)
References
edit- ^ Troy (14 December 2015). "The Sonic Garage: Episode 13 Adam Hawkins". Sonic Garage Podcast. Archived from the original on 2 June 2016. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
- ^ Moir, Steve. "Owner". Moir Entertainment. Moir Entertainment. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
- ^ Vdovin, Marsha (April 2007). "Artist Interview: Adam Hawkins Goes From Rap to Rock to Big Band With Universal Audio". UAudio. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
- ^ Hicks, Mason. "Congratulations 2010 Grammy Winners". Universal Audio. Universal Audio. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
- ^ Jean-Pierre Hombach (2012). 50 Cent. Hombach. p. 46. ISBN 978-1-4716-0385-3.
- ^ "Jerry Cantrell – Setting Sun (from DC's Dark Nights: Metal Soundtrack)". Discogs. Retrieved August 31, 2018.